The Supreme Court's 6-3 ruling in Louisiana v. Callais strikes down a VRA-compliant redistricting map as racial gerrymandering, gutting Section 2 ahead of 2026 midterms.
The Supreme Court ruled 6-3 on April 29, 2026, that Louisiana's 2024 congressional redistricting map violated the Equal Protection Clause as an unconstitutional racial gerrymander [1]. The map had created a second majority-Black congressional district, a remedy Louisiana drew specifically to comply with Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act following prior litigation [2]. The Court's majority, in an opinion authored by Justice Samuel Alito, held that race predominated impermissibly in the map's construction and that the state could not shield that predominance behind a VRA-compliance rationale [1].
The case, *Louisiana v. Callais*, arose from a federal challenge to the remedial map Louisiana adopted after courts found its earlier district lines diluted Black voting strength [2]. The matter reached the Supreme Court on direct appeal, placing the justices in the position of resolving whether a state acting to satisfy one constitutional command, the VRA's Section 2, could simultaneously violate another, the Equal Protection Clause's bar on racial sorting [3]. The NAACP Legal Defense Fund, which had pressed the original vote-dilution claims, was among the parties before the Court [2].
The decision's substantive reach extends well beyond Louisiana. Justice Alito's majority opinion materially tightened the *Thornburg v. Gingles* framework that has governed Section 2 vote-dilution claims since 1986, raising the evidentiary threshold plaintiffs must clear to prove racial vote dilution [1]. Justice Elena Kagan, joined by two colleagues in dissent, wrote that the ruling renders the VRA "all but a dead letter," a characterization that signals the breadth of what the majority foreclosed [1]. Legal scholars analyzing the opinion have noted that by permitting states to invoke partisan rationales when eliminating majority-minority districts, the Court effectively dissolved the practical distinction between permissible political line-drawing and prohibited racial sorting [3]. The ruling is the most consequential curtailment of the VRA since *Shelby County v. Holder* in 2013 [3].
The downstream effects are already materializing. Multiple Southern states have moved to redraw congressional maps, eliminating majority-minority districts, ahead of the 2026 midterm elections [1]. Redistricting litigants and voting-rights organizations face an altered legal landscape in which the core enforcement mechanism of Section 2 is substantially weakened and court-ordered remedial maps carry new constitutional vulnerability. Congressional Democrats have signaled interest in legislative responses, though any statutory fix would require overcoming the same judicial scrutiny the decision now mandates [3].